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Chicago examiner vol xv no 30 a m sunday price five cents c * * * sunday Chicago january 24 1915 aero bombs damage u s consulate submarine battered byshells british bombard teuton naval base at zee brugge wreck one ship airman battles 7 foes and escapes war news summary england this week will send 300,000 recruits the first great unit of its relnforce â€¢ ments to france in an effort to cut the german left petrograd believes the lull before warsaw means the ger mans soon will try to drive the russians from austria and hungary along the east prussian frontier a battle along an 80 * mile front is imminent turkey officially announces the russians are retreating in the caucasus and the english offensive checked in arabia german reinforcements have appeared in the argonne and have stopped the french ad vance on metz in a forty eight-hour battle in the for est which is still raging the french have destroyed a pontoon bridge across the meuse threatening to belea guer the germans on the left bank of that river at st mihlel the kaiser was reported in petrograd to have demanded an explanation of rouma i nia's warlike moves [ london jan 23 hostile ; raids carried out simultaneously by | british and german airmen working ithe partial destruction of a germim | submarine the killing of eight prr sons and wounding of a score of i others and finally a clash betweeu ; the two raiding aerial squadrons in i which one british airman fought his ; way clear of seven of the enemy's j machines and escaped were related lin official dispatches received here j to-day a german bomb dropped on oun ' kirk fell outsitf te united states consulate breaking several windows ; and smashing some of the furniture air battle officially told the official press bureau to-night made the following announcement j during friday zeebrugge was vis j lted by aviation squadron command i er r b davies and flight command j er lieutenant r pierce who dropped j twenty-seven bombs on two subma rines and one on the guns on the mole it is believed one submarine was considerably damaged and many cas ualties resulted among the crew serving the guns * wlflle reconnoltering before the attack squadron commander davies was surrounded by seven german aeroplanes but he eluded them all on the way to zeebrugge commander davies sustained an injury in his thigh but he continued on his jour ney and is now progressing satisfac torily the british statement was issued following the receipt of the follow ing announcement from the berlin war office the enemy's airmen dropped bombs yesterday nt ghent and zee brugge without success bombs dropped on bri'ges another british aviator to-day dropped a number of bombs on the canal docks at bruges near whioh there are important stores of german munition but the resuit.of thai attack has net xet been t**ommi Â£â€¢Â» hears shot at brother by wife 85 miles away chicagoan calls up milwaukee police and notifies them o jealous woman's act while husband was telephoning fleming jones who has an office jat 431 south dearborn slreet ! called up his brother archie in milwaukee on the long distance tele phone yesterday afternoon after two minutes of conversation a sharp report sounded in the receiver then for a moment there was silence muttering something about rotten kmrice mr jones began to move the receiver hook up and down but t brother's voice was still there clarice has shot me came in a r terror-stricken tone over the eighty-five miles of wire t heard it shouted the cni foan i'll be up there right " inother shot interrupted him and in he could hear the tap tap of i milwaukee telephone receiver as swung against the wall but he â€¢ ould not get his brother again calls police 85 miles without taking the receiver from his ear mr jones called the mil waukee police department and told hem that two people had been shot in an isolated house in the aristo cratic suburb of east milwaukee fifteen minutes later he was on a train bound for milwaukee the police rushed to the house where they found a man and woman eh seriously wounded hearing her band talking to his brother Chicago and believing he was ing a lawyer of his plans to di ce her mrs clarice boken jones . shot her husband as he stood at the phone immediately she had turned the weapon on herself in flicting a wound which it was thought at first would prove fatal admits jealousy in poinded the story of the shooiing as the to told it last night to the police kes it appear the result of a piti , trivial misunderstanding archie les said he had no hint of his wife's jealousy until she had fired and before the wife became uncon scious she made a statement declar i ing that she did the shooting that she had made a mistake and that she did not want archie to serve a prison term for shootin her she said that she was convinced now ilt he was not planning to divorce it's terrible she moaned i don't e if i die but i don't want archie go because of my mistake i thought he was going to get a orce and i couldn't think of his ing with another woman then 1 ited for a chance to shoot him i thought he was talking to a lcago lawyer i had heard him talking to some Chicago law-yer named woodside and thought he was talking about separation now he has told me it was about the children and i have hurt him for that wedding a run away archie jones is milwaukee repre sentative for the new york belting 3c packing company his wife is a ormer indiana girl and they were married in kalamazoo mich in a runaway wedding planned to avoid the bride's indiana friends jones has two children by a former mar riage both were out of the house when the shooting took place it was all such a mistake said mrs j fleming jones at her home 4183 north paulina street last night archie has two children paul eight years eld and elizabeth who is six â€” ii fleming called his brother up s afternoon to arrange for them to ne down here and visit us archie and his family lived here in Chicago somewhere on cuyler ave nue for some time and only moved to milwaukee a little more than a yeur ago the children like Chicago and visit ub frequently 1 don't see how their coming could possibly have caused any trouble between archie jid his wife homing jones is the ci icago rep resentative of the kramer governor cempany of detroit mrs broderick seizes thief but loses her silver a rchie jones who â€¢** was shot by his wife at m ilwaukee while telephoning his brother in Chicago kenmore avenue society folk join in chase of burglar but are outrun when mr and mrs frank broder ick returned to their home 434s ken more avenue last night they found the front door locked from the in side mrs broderick wemt around to the rear and met a negro coining out of the door with a pillowcase full of silverware over his shoulder she grappled with him and was being se verely beaten when her husband at tracted by her cries came up the negro struck mr broderick on the head with a billy and fled residents of the fashionable neigh borhood joined mrs broderick in the chase but the burglar escaped the loss amounted to probably 1,500 | girl hit by auto sues mcweeny for 10,000 john mcweeny former chief of police and his brother james mc weeny were sued for 10,000 yester day by charles a payne in behalf of his daughter kathlyn payne a minor according to francis x busch attorney for the plaintiff the girl was run down by an automobile owned by the mcweenys ant suf fered a broken arm j p morgan aid in british plan is back xflw york jan 23 â€” henry p davison a member of the firm of j p morgan & co who made the arrangements by which that concern will be the commercial agecnt for the british government during the war returned to new york to-day on the lusitania mrs wm birk shot as divorce battle neared millionaire brewer's wife found dangerously wounded in her room husband had sued mrs william birk wife of the mil lionaire head of the birk bros brew ing company is at the columbus hospital with a dangerous bullet wound in her left shoulder the cir cumstances of the shooting are sur rounded in mystery and every ef fort to secure an explanation of it was rebuffed by members of the birk household the shooting occurred friday aft ernoon i:i the birk home 535 strat ford place it was not reported to the police sox calls physicia when the fact became known last night dr william f semple 703 melrose street issued the following statement i first learned that mrs birk was wounded when her son phillip and a maid from the home rushed into my office for aid i was hurried to the house and there found mrs birk un conscious in her bedroom a revol ver lay on the floor and there was a bullet wound which had penetrated her left shoulder hurried to hospital she was in a dangerous state i hurried her to a hospital without asking any questions friday morning an attorney for mr birk went before judge foeil to ask for an immediate hearing of a suit for divorce he had instituted against mrs birk when informed of this dr semple said mrs birk has suffered and no doubt dreaded the ordeal which faced her in a divorce court the physician said he understood mrs birk recently had purchased a revolver saying she feared the rob bery of her home named two mex ist suit mr birk filed a petition for divorce last september naming a man nemed as quinlan and an unknown man from new york mrs birk in a crossbill filed a few days later de nied the charges and accused ler husband of a statutory offense pending the hearing she was awarded 5350 a month and permitted to live in the stratford place home mr birk has been maintaining quar ters at the Chicago athletic asso ciation clubhouse will die in lake pens co-ed vanishes i mean to kill myself â€” i think i will jump into the lake so wrote miss jennie seass a sev enteen-year-old student of the state university at urbana more than a week ago after she had come to chi cago and hidden herself under an as sumed name she cannot be found and her fiance and her family fear she has killed herself miss seass left the home of her uncle and guardian in urbana on january 15 she came to Chicago and registered for one night at the new southern hotel where she wrote to her fiance and schoolmate wil liam bell at urbana last night her uncle george miller arrived in Chicago to find her columbia yacht club will take simple life vow dry land sailors who battled raging foam only in cham pagne glasses must go indoor yachtsmen whose only ac quaintance with the raging foam was that with the foam in champagne glasses will be seen no more about the columbia yacht club the club is to reorganize and lead the simple life on no less an authority than that of commodore robert l doran there is going to be a weeding out that will affect nearly half of the 400 mem bers and those in the weed class are the ones to whom is attributed the state of bankruptcy into which the exclusive club was precipitated friday that bankruptcy proceeding is a blessing in disguise declared com modore doran last night it is going to give us an opportu nity to get rid of about two hundred bloods who are not sailors never were sailors and didn't want to be sailors when they joined the or ganization that crowd last year got hold of the ropes of administration and spent about 14,000 for wines and dances and drawing room tea parties two hundred business men have notified me they will stick by the club until the last dog is hung we are going to hold a meeting of creditors monday afternoon and are going to make arrangements i know will be satisfactory to them louis hill is tricked into full-dress plunge st paul jan 23 â€” louis w hill's dinner last night in honor of jw p kenney vice president of the great northern railroad was at an end md the guests were seated about the natatorium when there was a cry and a splash and otis everett president of the northwestern trust company was floundering ih ten feet of water hill cyrus p brown vice president of the first national bank and charles patterson treasurer of the o'donneli shoe company leaped to the rescue in evening clothes then everett began laughing and every one remembered that he-rs champion water polo player willard hall epidemic is puzzle for co-eds there is no telling what may hap pen within the next few days at wil i lard hall the woman's dormitory of northwostern university a perfect ly good epidemic is under way add it's only drawback seems to be that no one knows just what kind it is miss hazel crabill started things yesterday when she was taken to the evanstou hospital several girls packed their suitcases and started for the northwestern station small pox was whispered _ but it was chickenpox and the girls came back early in the even ing it was announced five had the mump it's almost examination time midsummer garb at saddle and cycle club the sadddle and cycle club held its annual misummer dance and party last evening in the clubhouse at sheridan road and foster avenue the rules of the occasion compelled guests to wear summer raiment and stroll about the spacious grounds with as much nonchalance as though the calendar said july mrs samuel insull alone proved firm enough to defy the board of directors by ap pearing in a conventional and charming evening gown warmer weather is promise for to-day the cold spell which came yes terday will be of short duration ac cording to the weather man the forecast for to-day is fair and warmer while cloudiness and mod erate southerly winds are promised for to-morrow warmer weather will prevail generally throughout Illinois according to the forecast the lowest temperature yesterday was i degrees above zero at 8 o'clock in the morn thaw hailed as hero by bostonians hoot jeroie cheering throngs rush police and storm train to wish prisoner good luck mayor breaks date to sing to him i boston jan 23 â€” a demonstration which challenged that accorded any president or presidential candidate in | boston in years followed harry ken j dall thaw's arrival in this city this evening it took twenty policemen a squad j of plain clothes men and a squad ot railroad porters to keep the 2,500 per sons who crowd.d the north union station from laying hold of thaw and carrying him like a harvard football hero on their shoulders they cheered screamed whistled and rang bells they shouted encour agement to thaw and poured sarcasm and spite upon william travers je rome whom they hooted as they might have a man convicted of some atrocious crime jerome smiled and thaw laughed in sheer delight thaw walked through the line beaten for him by the police bowing and doffing his ! hat to as many of the friendly i crowd as he could thaw made reply thanks thanks he said as he bowed that's awfully goqd of you | reserves called ot from north station to the hotel ! i where thaw and his guards halted for dinner and a brief rest the crowd followed it was generally noised abroad that the most popular prisoner in the country was to take the 5 o'clock train for new york as a result south station was so thronged that the police reserves were called out to preserve order so determined was the south station throng to see and greet thaw that they swept aside the ticket inspectors at the gates and boarded the train s>earching the cars not since george stalllngs drove his obscure baseball team to a world's | championship has boston so entirely i abandoned its credited dignity the ! hotel where thaw stopped was com pelled to place a special officer at its doors so great and varied was the throng seeking admittance such was the general abandonment in bos ton that john p fitzgerald honey fitz cut a social engagement to come to the hotel and sing sweet adeline in the grillroom leaves for new york thaw will leave boston to-night at midnight unless jerome again changes bis plans arriving in new york soon after 7 o'clock to-morrow morning he will be taken to tho tombs as fast as a taxicab can travel thaw left manchester for concord in a most cheerful frame of mind he cheered up the weeping woman who has acted as housekeeper at his elm street cottage by assuring her that lie would return soon he shook more hands than a candidate j for sheriff and diplomatically dis ! posed of a gushing woman who wanted to kiss him for his moth er's sake by saying not now please some other time he was taken to concord by hol nian drew bheriff of coos county and dell stevens the special officer delegated to share drew's vigil most remarkable to persons on the outside however and most disconcerting to the suspicious and alert jerome was the fact that at no time during the day was thaw represented or inter viewed by counsel no more cheer ful and confident person existed in all new england than thaw on the trip to concord he chatted gayly with the newspaper men and indited a torrid denunciation of john lanyon the detective who accompanied jer ome to concord denounces detective in this thaw said i dislike to be disagreeable but the presence of a professional strikebreaker in mr jerome's party is objectionable mr jerome has brought enough shame on the good name of the state of new york without bringing an english strike breaker and making the ner york taxpayers foot the bill in the united states courtroom whither thaw was hustled were jerome franklin kennedy deputy attorney general of the state of new mrs lay sues for riches she earned as more alimony unescorted girls cause women to assail city dance the league of cook county clubs yesterday refused to indorse the i municipal dances because the women declared there has so far been no system devised for chaperoning young girls after the dances it was sug gested the city be asked to provide some other form of amusements for the young people who cannot go to the dances the refusal to indorse dances came after the report of the dance com mittee which declared dangers con front the unescorted girl leaving the dances the municipal dances are funda mentally the right thing if we can have chaperonage said mrs a p c matson mrs leonora z meder commis sioner of public welfare who has had charge of the dances declared girls who ask for chaperona are given them but that the clubwomen who promised to act as chaperons have not made good and she has to depend on her ten investigators declares she directed ex-hus band's rise from 83 a month to 40,000 a year , sirs orene b lay divorced wife of robert d lay secretary of the national life insurance company who she says has an annual income of 40,000 a year is asking for her fee as the business counselor who built up his fortune from a salary of 83 a month which mr lay was re ceiving as a bookkeeper when they were married in november 1899 mrs lay sets up her claim in an amended petition filed yesterday in the circuit court before judge mc goorty asking an increase from 1300 a month to 500 in alimony to be paid her by lay or a lump sum of money mrs lay alleges her husband's statement that his income is only ! 25,000 a year upon which order for : 300 a month alimony was entered by j judge mcgoorty some time ago was false that he concealed some of his j financial interests from the court it was with her advtrs and asslat continued on 4th page 8th column [!*â– â€¢ m ssi â– % n ) vi'ssst^s bk sp mm ! '" d warmer to k w lj i â– b lw Â» temperature yes mml i n^a sr jp average 14 : , '. _> the sensible way to look for lost articles when you lose a piece of jewelry â€” your pocketbook or anything which you value â€” don't waste your time in rushing here and there â€” sit down in your most com fortable chair and hunt for it first of all try to recall exactly where you were when you last had it in your possession then where you were when you first missed it phone these facts and a brief description of the lost article to main 5000 and your part of the work is finished but the news of your loss will reach thousands of people the lost and found columns in the examiner's want ad and resil i'.tfatd section are read in more than 240,000 hotries daily an^over half a million on sunday

Chicago examiner vol xv no 30 a m sunday price five cents c * * * sunday Chicago january 24 1915 aero bombs damage u s consulate submarine battered byshells british bombard teuton naval base at zee brugge wreck one ship airman battles 7 foes and escapes war news summary england this week will send 300,000 recruits the first great unit of its relnforce â€¢ ments to france in an effort to cut the german left petrograd believes the lull before warsaw means the ger mans soon will try to drive the russians from austria and hungary along the east prussian frontier a battle along an 80 * mile front is imminent turkey officially announces the russians are retreating in the caucasus and the english offensive checked in arabia german reinforcements have appeared in the argonne and have stopped the french ad vance on metz in a forty eight-hour battle in the for est which is still raging the french have destroyed a pontoon bridge across the meuse threatening to belea guer the germans on the left bank of that river at st mihlel the kaiser was reported in petrograd to have demanded an explanation of rouma i nia's warlike moves [ london jan 23 hostile ; raids carried out simultaneously by | british and german airmen working ithe partial destruction of a germim | submarine the killing of eight prr sons and wounding of a score of i others and finally a clash betweeu ; the two raiding aerial squadrons in i which one british airman fought his ; way clear of seven of the enemy's j machines and escaped were related lin official dispatches received here j to-day a german bomb dropped on oun ' kirk fell outsitf te united states consulate breaking several windows ; and smashing some of the furniture air battle officially told the official press bureau to-night made the following announcement j during friday zeebrugge was vis j lted by aviation squadron command i er r b davies and flight command j er lieutenant r pierce who dropped j twenty-seven bombs on two subma rines and one on the guns on the mole it is believed one submarine was considerably damaged and many cas ualties resulted among the crew serving the guns * wlflle reconnoltering before the attack squadron commander davies was surrounded by seven german aeroplanes but he eluded them all on the way to zeebrugge commander davies sustained an injury in his thigh but he continued on his jour ney and is now progressing satisfac torily the british statement was issued following the receipt of the follow ing announcement from the berlin war office the enemy's airmen dropped bombs yesterday nt ghent and zee brugge without success bombs dropped on bri'ges another british aviator to-day dropped a number of bombs on the canal docks at bruges near whioh there are important stores of german munition but the resuit.of thai attack has net xet been t**ommi Â£â€¢Â» hears shot at brother by wife 85 miles away chicagoan calls up milwaukee police and notifies them o jealous woman's act while husband was telephoning fleming jones who has an office jat 431 south dearborn slreet ! called up his brother archie in milwaukee on the long distance tele phone yesterday afternoon after two minutes of conversation a sharp report sounded in the receiver then for a moment there was silence muttering something about rotten kmrice mr jones began to move the receiver hook up and down but t brother's voice was still there clarice has shot me came in a r terror-stricken tone over the eighty-five miles of wire t heard it shouted the cni foan i'll be up there right " inother shot interrupted him and in he could hear the tap tap of i milwaukee telephone receiver as swung against the wall but he â€¢ ould not get his brother again calls police 85 miles without taking the receiver from his ear mr jones called the mil waukee police department and told hem that two people had been shot in an isolated house in the aristo cratic suburb of east milwaukee fifteen minutes later he was on a train bound for milwaukee the police rushed to the house where they found a man and woman eh seriously wounded hearing her band talking to his brother Chicago and believing he was ing a lawyer of his plans to di ce her mrs clarice boken jones . shot her husband as he stood at the phone immediately she had turned the weapon on herself in flicting a wound which it was thought at first would prove fatal admits jealousy in poinded the story of the shooiing as the to told it last night to the police kes it appear the result of a piti , trivial misunderstanding archie les said he had no hint of his wife's jealousy until she had fired and before the wife became uncon scious she made a statement declar i ing that she did the shooting that she had made a mistake and that she did not want archie to serve a prison term for shootin her she said that she was convinced now ilt he was not planning to divorce it's terrible she moaned i don't e if i die but i don't want archie go because of my mistake i thought he was going to get a orce and i couldn't think of his ing with another woman then 1 ited for a chance to shoot him i thought he was talking to a lcago lawyer i had heard him talking to some Chicago law-yer named woodside and thought he was talking about separation now he has told me it was about the children and i have hurt him for that wedding a run away archie jones is milwaukee repre sentative for the new york belting 3c packing company his wife is a ormer indiana girl and they were married in kalamazoo mich in a runaway wedding planned to avoid the bride's indiana friends jones has two children by a former mar riage both were out of the house when the shooting took place it was all such a mistake said mrs j fleming jones at her home 4183 north paulina street last night archie has two children paul eight years eld and elizabeth who is six â€” ii fleming called his brother up s afternoon to arrange for them to ne down here and visit us archie and his family lived here in Chicago somewhere on cuyler ave nue for some time and only moved to milwaukee a little more than a yeur ago the children like Chicago and visit ub frequently 1 don't see how their coming could possibly have caused any trouble between archie jid his wife homing jones is the ci icago rep resentative of the kramer governor cempany of detroit mrs broderick seizes thief but loses her silver a rchie jones who â€¢** was shot by his wife at m ilwaukee while telephoning his brother in Chicago kenmore avenue society folk join in chase of burglar but are outrun when mr and mrs frank broder ick returned to their home 434s ken more avenue last night they found the front door locked from the in side mrs broderick wemt around to the rear and met a negro coining out of the door with a pillowcase full of silverware over his shoulder she grappled with him and was being se verely beaten when her husband at tracted by her cries came up the negro struck mr broderick on the head with a billy and fled residents of the fashionable neigh borhood joined mrs broderick in the chase but the burglar escaped the loss amounted to probably 1,500 | girl hit by auto sues mcweeny for 10,000 john mcweeny former chief of police and his brother james mc weeny were sued for 10,000 yester day by charles a payne in behalf of his daughter kathlyn payne a minor according to francis x busch attorney for the plaintiff the girl was run down by an automobile owned by the mcweenys ant suf fered a broken arm j p morgan aid in british plan is back xflw york jan 23 â€” henry p davison a member of the firm of j p morgan & co who made the arrangements by which that concern will be the commercial agecnt for the british government during the war returned to new york to-day on the lusitania mrs wm birk shot as divorce battle neared millionaire brewer's wife found dangerously wounded in her room husband had sued mrs william birk wife of the mil lionaire head of the birk bros brew ing company is at the columbus hospital with a dangerous bullet wound in her left shoulder the cir cumstances of the shooting are sur rounded in mystery and every ef fort to secure an explanation of it was rebuffed by members of the birk household the shooting occurred friday aft ernoon i:i the birk home 535 strat ford place it was not reported to the police sox calls physicia when the fact became known last night dr william f semple 703 melrose street issued the following statement i first learned that mrs birk was wounded when her son phillip and a maid from the home rushed into my office for aid i was hurried to the house and there found mrs birk un conscious in her bedroom a revol ver lay on the floor and there was a bullet wound which had penetrated her left shoulder hurried to hospital she was in a dangerous state i hurried her to a hospital without asking any questions friday morning an attorney for mr birk went before judge foeil to ask for an immediate hearing of a suit for divorce he had instituted against mrs birk when informed of this dr semple said mrs birk has suffered and no doubt dreaded the ordeal which faced her in a divorce court the physician said he understood mrs birk recently had purchased a revolver saying she feared the rob bery of her home named two mex ist suit mr birk filed a petition for divorce last september naming a man nemed as quinlan and an unknown man from new york mrs birk in a crossbill filed a few days later de nied the charges and accused ler husband of a statutory offense pending the hearing she was awarded 5350 a month and permitted to live in the stratford place home mr birk has been maintaining quar ters at the Chicago athletic asso ciation clubhouse will die in lake pens co-ed vanishes i mean to kill myself â€” i think i will jump into the lake so wrote miss jennie seass a sev enteen-year-old student of the state university at urbana more than a week ago after she had come to chi cago and hidden herself under an as sumed name she cannot be found and her fiance and her family fear she has killed herself miss seass left the home of her uncle and guardian in urbana on january 15 she came to Chicago and registered for one night at the new southern hotel where she wrote to her fiance and schoolmate wil liam bell at urbana last night her uncle george miller arrived in Chicago to find her columbia yacht club will take simple life vow dry land sailors who battled raging foam only in cham pagne glasses must go indoor yachtsmen whose only ac quaintance with the raging foam was that with the foam in champagne glasses will be seen no more about the columbia yacht club the club is to reorganize and lead the simple life on no less an authority than that of commodore robert l doran there is going to be a weeding out that will affect nearly half of the 400 mem bers and those in the weed class are the ones to whom is attributed the state of bankruptcy into which the exclusive club was precipitated friday that bankruptcy proceeding is a blessing in disguise declared com modore doran last night it is going to give us an opportu nity to get rid of about two hundred bloods who are not sailors never were sailors and didn't want to be sailors when they joined the or ganization that crowd last year got hold of the ropes of administration and spent about 14,000 for wines and dances and drawing room tea parties two hundred business men have notified me they will stick by the club until the last dog is hung we are going to hold a meeting of creditors monday afternoon and are going to make arrangements i know will be satisfactory to them louis hill is tricked into full-dress plunge st paul jan 23 â€” louis w hill's dinner last night in honor of jw p kenney vice president of the great northern railroad was at an end md the guests were seated about the natatorium when there was a cry and a splash and otis everett president of the northwestern trust company was floundering ih ten feet of water hill cyrus p brown vice president of the first national bank and charles patterson treasurer of the o'donneli shoe company leaped to the rescue in evening clothes then everett began laughing and every one remembered that he-rs champion water polo player willard hall epidemic is puzzle for co-eds there is no telling what may hap pen within the next few days at wil i lard hall the woman's dormitory of northwostern university a perfect ly good epidemic is under way add it's only drawback seems to be that no one knows just what kind it is miss hazel crabill started things yesterday when she was taken to the evanstou hospital several girls packed their suitcases and started for the northwestern station small pox was whispered _ but it was chickenpox and the girls came back early in the even ing it was announced five had the mump it's almost examination time midsummer garb at saddle and cycle club the sadddle and cycle club held its annual misummer dance and party last evening in the clubhouse at sheridan road and foster avenue the rules of the occasion compelled guests to wear summer raiment and stroll about the spacious grounds with as much nonchalance as though the calendar said july mrs samuel insull alone proved firm enough to defy the board of directors by ap pearing in a conventional and charming evening gown warmer weather is promise for to-day the cold spell which came yes terday will be of short duration ac cording to the weather man the forecast for to-day is fair and warmer while cloudiness and mod erate southerly winds are promised for to-morrow warmer weather will prevail generally throughout Illinois according to the forecast the lowest temperature yesterday was i degrees above zero at 8 o'clock in the morn thaw hailed as hero by bostonians hoot jeroie cheering throngs rush police and storm train to wish prisoner good luck mayor breaks date to sing to him i boston jan 23 â€” a demonstration which challenged that accorded any president or presidential candidate in | boston in years followed harry ken j dall thaw's arrival in this city this evening it took twenty policemen a squad j of plain clothes men and a squad ot railroad porters to keep the 2,500 per sons who crowd.d the north union station from laying hold of thaw and carrying him like a harvard football hero on their shoulders they cheered screamed whistled and rang bells they shouted encour agement to thaw and poured sarcasm and spite upon william travers je rome whom they hooted as they might have a man convicted of some atrocious crime jerome smiled and thaw laughed in sheer delight thaw walked through the line beaten for him by the police bowing and doffing his ! hat to as many of the friendly i crowd as he could thaw made reply thanks thanks he said as he bowed that's awfully goqd of you | reserves called ot from north station to the hotel ! i where thaw and his guards halted for dinner and a brief rest the crowd followed it was generally noised abroad that the most popular prisoner in the country was to take the 5 o'clock train for new york as a result south station was so thronged that the police reserves were called out to preserve order so determined was the south station throng to see and greet thaw that they swept aside the ticket inspectors at the gates and boarded the train s>earching the cars not since george stalllngs drove his obscure baseball team to a world's | championship has boston so entirely i abandoned its credited dignity the ! hotel where thaw stopped was com pelled to place a special officer at its doors so great and varied was the throng seeking admittance such was the general abandonment in bos ton that john p fitzgerald honey fitz cut a social engagement to come to the hotel and sing sweet adeline in the grillroom leaves for new york thaw will leave boston to-night at midnight unless jerome again changes bis plans arriving in new york soon after 7 o'clock to-morrow morning he will be taken to tho tombs as fast as a taxicab can travel thaw left manchester for concord in a most cheerful frame of mind he cheered up the weeping woman who has acted as housekeeper at his elm street cottage by assuring her that lie would return soon he shook more hands than a candidate j for sheriff and diplomatically dis ! posed of a gushing woman who wanted to kiss him for his moth er's sake by saying not now please some other time he was taken to concord by hol nian drew bheriff of coos county and dell stevens the special officer delegated to share drew's vigil most remarkable to persons on the outside however and most disconcerting to the suspicious and alert jerome was the fact that at no time during the day was thaw represented or inter viewed by counsel no more cheer ful and confident person existed in all new england than thaw on the trip to concord he chatted gayly with the newspaper men and indited a torrid denunciation of john lanyon the detective who accompanied jer ome to concord denounces detective in this thaw said i dislike to be disagreeable but the presence of a professional strikebreaker in mr jerome's party is objectionable mr jerome has brought enough shame on the good name of the state of new york without bringing an english strike breaker and making the ner york taxpayers foot the bill in the united states courtroom whither thaw was hustled were jerome franklin kennedy deputy attorney general of the state of new mrs lay sues for riches she earned as more alimony unescorted girls cause women to assail city dance the league of cook county clubs yesterday refused to indorse the i municipal dances because the women declared there has so far been no system devised for chaperoning young girls after the dances it was sug gested the city be asked to provide some other form of amusements for the young people who cannot go to the dances the refusal to indorse dances came after the report of the dance com mittee which declared dangers con front the unescorted girl leaving the dances the municipal dances are funda mentally the right thing if we can have chaperonage said mrs a p c matson mrs leonora z meder commis sioner of public welfare who has had charge of the dances declared girls who ask for chaperona are given them but that the clubwomen who promised to act as chaperons have not made good and she has to depend on her ten investigators declares she directed ex-hus band's rise from 83 a month to 40,000 a year , sirs orene b lay divorced wife of robert d lay secretary of the national life insurance company who she says has an annual income of 40,000 a year is asking for her fee as the business counselor who built up his fortune from a salary of 83 a month which mr lay was re ceiving as a bookkeeper when they were married in november 1899 mrs lay sets up her claim in an amended petition filed yesterday in the circuit court before judge mc goorty asking an increase from 1300 a month to 500 in alimony to be paid her by lay or a lump sum of money mrs lay alleges her husband's statement that his income is only ! 25,000 a year upon which order for : 300 a month alimony was entered by j judge mcgoorty some time ago was false that he concealed some of his j financial interests from the court it was with her advtrs and asslat continued on 4th page 8th column [!*â– â€¢ m ssi â– % n ) vi'ssst^s bk sp mm ! '" d warmer to k w lj i â– b lw Â» temperature yes mml i n^a sr jp average 14 : , '. _> the sensible way to look for lost articles when you lose a piece of jewelry â€” your pocketbook or anything which you value â€” don't waste your time in rushing here and there â€” sit down in your most com fortable chair and hunt for it first of all try to recall exactly where you were when you last had it in your possession then where you were when you first missed it phone these facts and a brief description of the lost article to main 5000 and your part of the work is finished but the news of your loss will reach thousands of people the lost and found columns in the examiner's want ad and resil i'.tfatd section are read in more than 240,000 hotries daily an^over half a million on sunday